Journal of Clinical Medicine (Oct 2022)

Safety, Feasibility and Technical Considerations from a Prospective, Observational Study—CIREL: Irinotecan-TACE for CRLM in 152 Patients

  • Thomas Helmberger,
  • Pierleone Lucatelli,
  • Philippe L. Pereira,
  • Aleksandar Gjoreski,
  • Ivona Jovanoska,
  • Zoltan Bansaghi,
  • Stavros Spiliopoulos,
  • Francesca Carchesio,
  • Dirk Arnold,
  • Andreas Baierl,
  • Bleranda Zeka,
  • Nathalie C. Kaufmann,
  • Julien Taieb,
  • Roberto Iezzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11206178
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 20
p. 6178

Abstract

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CIREL, a prospective, Europe-wide, observational study aimed to assess the real-world feasibility and tolerability of irinotecan-based transarterial chemoembolization (LP-irinotecan TACE) for unresectable colorectal cancer liver metastases with regard to the treatment plan and adverse events (AEs). CIREL enrolled 152 eligible patients (≥18 years) with liver-only or dominant metastases treated with LP-irinotecan TACE following a multidisciplinary tumor board decision. Data were prospectively collected for baseline, the number of planned and performed sessions, and technical information and safety according to CTCAE 4.03/5.0. Results from 351 analyzed treatment sessions showed technical success for 99% of sessions, and 121 patients (79%) completed all planned sessions. Further, 60% of sessions were performed using opioids, 4% intra-arterial anesthetics, and 25% both. Additionally, 60% of patients experienced at least one peri-interventional AE of any grade; 8% of grade 3–4. Occurrence of AEs was related to larger liver-involvement (p p = 0.002), and larger beads (p p = 0.01). LP-irinotecan TACE was tolerated well and had a high proportion of completed treatment plans. This minimally invasive locoregional treatment can be used together with concomitant systemic therapy or ablation.

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